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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between March 1991 and May 1994, 444 laparoscopic inguinal hernia repairs were undertaken in 375 patients: 386 transperitoneal and 58 extraperitoneal. During a follow-up period of 20.5 months (range 1-38) there have been three recurrences at 6, 7 and 12 months, all direct and all after transperitoneal repair. A total of 52 patients were treated as a day case (< 6 h), 317 patients spent less than 24 h in hospital and four patients were discharged on the second postoperative day. Operating time for transperitoneal hernia repair was 27 min (range 10-68) and extraperitoneal repair, 29 min (range 11-48). Short-term complications occurred in 18 patients: six haematomas, four seromas, one urinary retention and seven suffered persistent groin pain. Six patients have had neuralgia, three have had mesh removed and three further patients had individual clips removed from within the inguinal canal. There have been two adhesive small bowel obstructions. The first occurred 2 months after laparoscopic surgery and required laparotomy; the second occurred 2 years after surgery and had laparoscopic division of an adhesive band to a pelvic staple. There was one infected lymphocoele treated percutaneously.
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PMID:Laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair. 774 70

To determine if laparoscopic inguinal herniorrhaphy can be performed safely in unselected patients, the authors' first 100 consecutive laparoscopic inguinal hernia repairs were reviewed. All patients with inguinal hernias who were candidates for general anesthetic were accepted for the study. Their ages ranged from 18 to 84 years. One hundred and six hernias were laparoscopically repaired in 95 males and 4 females. One male patient required an open hernia repair. The first 14 patients were repaired with a preperitoneal patch and plug technique, and the next 85 with the double-buttress transabdominal preperitoneal approach. Two pieces of polypropylene mesh were stapled to the transversalis fascia, ileopubic tract, and Cooper's ligament after the preperitoneal dissection of the hernia was completed. The first piece was placed over the indirect space, with a slit for the cord medially, and the second piece was placed over the entire direct and indirect area. Patients have been followed from 8-18 months. To date, no recurrence has developed. Complications have included seroma, inferior epigastric bleeding, trocar hernia, and neuralgia. Patients have returned to work and normal activity in 2 days to 2 weeks, with an average of 1 week.
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PMID:Double-buttress laparoscopic herniorrhaphy. 845 21

The routine use of mesh for repair of inguinal hernia has been popularized by Lichtenstein and others. Although preperitoneal placement is more appealing than the onlay technique, the classical approach by Nyhus and Condon is difficult under local anesthesia and denervates the inguinal muscles to some degree. Preperitoneal mesh may become the standard for inguinal hernia as the laparoscopic approach becomes more popular. This report describes the author's first 100 hernia repairs done using a simplified preperitoneal approach under local anesthesia. The preperitoneal space is entered directly through the posterior floor, but a complete covering of the direct, indirect, and femoral spaces is accomplished similar to an open technique. After placement of the mesh, a truly "tension-free" closure of the posterior floor can be accomplished. Patients are discharged home in 1 to 2 hours. Because a standard approach and block are used, the learning curve for this operation should be brief compared with that of the laparoscopic method. The follow-up of this series is short (average: 15 months), but there have been no recurrences or infections. One patient returned to the operating room within 4 hours due to an arterial bleeder in Scarpa's fascia but was discharged that day and had no subsequent problems. Another patient has a postoperative neuralgia probably unrelated to the mesh. Otherwise, there has no complications with the placement of the Marlex mesh. Patients are allowed to return to full activity and work at their discretion.
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PMID:Simplified preperitoneal Marlex hernia repair. 848 44

The development of minimally invasive surgery has accepted the challenge by having tried to repair inguino-femoral hernias laparoscopically. The authors performed 65 laparoscopic hernioplasties in one year. "Transabdominal preperitoneal" technique was applied in 61 cases and "intraperitoneal onlay mesh" in 4 cases. Fifty-three patients were operated, 12 of them had bilateral hernias. Recurrent hernia was the indication in 22 patients (34%). The average operating time was 102 and 144 minutes in the unilateral and the bilateral cases, respectively. There was neither wound infection, nor general complication. Spontaneously dissolving seroma/haematoma of the spermatic cord was noticed (detected by ultrasound) in 5 patients (7.7%). The neuralgia caused by the irritation of the nerves of the region in 4 patients (6.1%) disappeared without sequels after treatment with vitamins B. The 2 early recurrences (3.2%) were considered to be caused by technical unexperience; the affected patients were treated successfully with the "intraperitoneal onlay mesh" technique. It is emphasized that laparoscopic hernioplasty has definite advantages, namely minimal postoperative pain, early mobilization, short hospital stay and early restoration of full physical activity (in 1 to 2 weeks). On the other hand, general anaesthesia and intraperitoneal invasion are required and the operation consumes much time and cost.
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PMID:A new method to repair inguino-femoral hernias: laparoscopic hernioplasty. 865 34

The development of minimally invasive surgery brought up the challenge: to repair the frequent inguino-femoral hernias laparoscopically. The authors performed 65 laparoscopic hernioplasties in one year: "transabdominal preperitoneal" technique was used in 61 cases und "intraperitoneal onlay mesh" in 4 cases. Fifty-three patients were operated on, 12 of them had bilateral hernias. Recurrent hernia was the indication in 22 patients (34%). The average operating time was 102 and 144 minutes in the unilateral and the bilateral cases, respectively. There was no wound infection, or general complication. Spontaneously dissolving seroma/hematoma of the spermatic cord was noticed and detected by ultrasound in 5 patients (7.7%). The neuralgia caused by the irritation of the nerves of the region in 4 patients (6.1%) disappeared without sequels after treatment with vitamins B. The 2 early recurrences (3.2%), considered to be caused by technical inexperience, these patients were treated successfully with the "intraperitoneal onlay mesh" technique. In the authors' opinion there are definite advantages of laparoscopic hernioplasty, namely the minimal postoperative pain, early mobilization, shorter hospital stay and early restoration of full physical activity (in 1-2 weeks) as well as the known disadvantages of this technique (narcosis, longer operative time, intraperitoneal procedure, higher costs).
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PMID:[New possibility in inguino-femoral hernia repair: laparoscopic herniaplasty]. 875 83

The posterior approach for groin hernia repair as popularized by Stoppa and Nyhus is one of the most solid repairs available. It requires a larger incision than the anterior approach, which has limited its use to recurrent and bilateral hernias. The endoscopic extraperitoneal herniorrhaphy (EEPH) accomplishes a similar repair via three minute incisions. This study suggests that EEPH is at least as safe and efficient as the open preperitoneal repair. Three hundred sixteen male patients underwent 405 hernia repairs by an endoscopic extraperitoneal approach. Ages ranged from 18 to 82 years old. There were 204 indirect, 182 direct, 13 pantaloon, and six femoral hernias. Eighty-nine were bilateral and 42 were recurrent. All repairs were done using polypropylene mesh. Follow-up has been achieved in 89% of patients and ranged from 7 to 50 months, with a median of 25 months. Seven patients (2.2%) required conversion to an open approach. Five recurrences have developed to date. Complications (5.7%) have included urinary retention, bladder injury, groin and/or scrotal hematoma, trocar site infection, lateral femoral cutaneous nerve neuralgia, and cardiac arrhythmia. Endoscopic extraperitoneal herniorrhaphy may provide an appropriate alternative to other methods of hernia repair when performed by experienced laparoscopists.
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PMID:Endoscopic extraperitoneal herniorrhaphy in 316 patients. 891 72

We reviewed 410 cases, 365 males and 45 females, mean age 64 years, of inguinal and femoral hernia, from 1/1/1991 to 31/12/1994, repaired with Lichtenstein and Trabucco techniques. Recurrent hernias repaired were 36 (8,8%). Local anesthesia was used in 82% and follow-up has ranged from 6 months to 4 years. The meshes used are made with a single layer of polipropylene and the Trabucco plugs T1 were made by hand at the operating table. In our experience these two techniques are simple, but is very important, before application of the mesh, a correct dissection of inguinal region. We made a complete excision of cremasteric fibers preservig, if possible, the genital branch of the genitofemoral nerve. The transversalis fascia is introflected and sutured in direct hernia repair or when there are a loss of tissues. The preliminary results obtained with the "tension free" hernioplasty are satisfying. The most important complications were 9 hematomas and an important and persistent inguinal neuralgia in 1 case. There were no recurrences, but we must considered the short follow-up period.
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PMID:[Preliminary experience in prosthetic hernia surgery]. 892 87

Laparoscopic hernia surgery was introduced in this unit in May 1992. Up to November 1995, 426 patients with 491 inguinal and femoral hernias have undergone surgery. A transabdominal preperitoneal (TAPP) approach was used in 339 patients with 393 hernias. After June 1994 a totally extraperitoneal (TEP) technique was used in 87 patients with 98 hernias. This prospective nonrandomized study deals with the learning curve, complications, and early results. The mean (SD) follow-up times in the TAPP and TEP groups were 23 (9) and 7 (4) months, respectively. Mean operating times and hospital stays did not differ between the TAPP and TEP patients, but the period off work was shorter in the TEP group. Fifteen major complications, including one postoperative death, two bowel obstructions, one severe neuralgia, three trocar hernias, one epigastric artery bleeding episode, and seven recurrences, were recorded; all except one was in the TAPP group. The TEP operation may be the method of choice in laparoscopic hernia surgery.
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PMID:Transperitoneal or totally extraperitoneal approach in laparoscopic hernia repair: results of 491 consecutive herniorrhaphies. 910 32

Between October 1992 and September 1994, 70 patients presenting with primary unilateral hernia were randomly assigned to either a transabdominal preperitoneal laparoscopic (group L) repair (n = 35) with a 3 x 5 inch polypropylene mesh or a conventional Shouldice repair (group S) (n = 35). The series consisted of 60 men and 10 women, with a median age of 56 years and a BMI of 24. We used the Nyhus classification; there were 25 type 2, 24 type 3a and 21 type 3b hernias. Preoperative characteristics of both groups were equivalent. When comparing group L to group S, we noted a similar operative time (65 +/- 20 min) and a similar postoperative hospital stay (3.8 +/- 1.3 days). The postoperative pain that was evaluated on a visual analogue scale (score from 0 to 10) was lower in group L. On the first and third postoperative day, the mean score was 3.4 +/- 1.5 and 1.3 +/- 1.4 in (group L compared) to 5.3 +/- 1.9 (p < 0.001) and 2.8 +/- 1.8 (p < 0.005) in group S. Significant morbidity occurred in 7 patients of group L: 3 seromas and 4 cases of orchitis, and in 5 patients of group S: 1 wound abcess, 2 cases of chronic neuralgia and 2 cases of orchitis. We recorded a quicker return to home activities in group L: 6 +/- 2 versus 10 +/- 4 days (p < 0.05) in group S but time off work was similar in both groups (30 +/- 9 days). All patients were evaluated in April 1996: the median follow-up was 30 months (range: 19-42 months). We recorded 1 recurrence in group L and 3 in group S. Statistical analysis revealed that the recurrence rate, for patients older than 50 and presenting with type 3 hernia, was higher in group S (3/14 = 21%) than in group L (0/13 = 0%). In conclusion, compared to Shouldice repair, laparoscopic herniorrhaphy is associated with less postoperative pain, a quicker return to everyday activities and an equivalent postoperative morbidity. In our series, the recurrence rate was even lower for patients older than 50 with type 3 hernia.
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PMID:[Prospective controlled study comparing laparoscopy and the Shouldice technique in the treatment of unilateral inguinal hernia]. 912 84

Beginning in 1990, the tension-free inguinal hernioplasties were adopted for the treatment of primary groin hernias in men. 1252 tension-free hernioplasties were performed in 1,076 men and followed for one to six years. Lichenstein's tension-free hernioplasty and Gilbert's sutureless hernioplasty were used, usually in combination. Anesthesia was local in 97% of the operations. 15 complications occurred (1.2%): one wound infection, one seroma, 12 hematomas, and one ilioinguinal neuralgia, 6 recurrences occurred (0.5%): 4 indirect, one direct and one femoral. No indirect recurrences have occurred since placing Gilbert's cone shaped plug in the deep ring. Tension-free hernioplasties consisting of a patch of polypropylene mesh plus a cone plug of the same material, placed in the deep ring when an indirect hernia is present, produce excellent results and are the preferred methods to manage the majority of primary inguinal hernias in men.
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PMID:[My experience in repairing, without tension, primary inguinal hernia in men]. 923 2


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